HF4614

Criminal immunity provided for certain acts committed by pregnant persons.
Legislative Session 94 (2025-2026)

Related bill: SF1289

AI Generated Summary

Purpose

  • The bill aims to provide criminal immunity for pregnant people for certain actions, by preventing charges or convictions for conduct that would not be criminal if the person were not pregnant.

Main Provisions

  • Adds a new immunity provision in Minnesota Statutes, specifically Section 609.077 (Immunity Bar to Prosecution for Certain Actions by Pregnant Person).
  • Wording: A pregnant person may not be charged with or convicted of a crime for conduct that would not be criminalized if the same person was not pregnant.
  • Included examples (not limited to these):
    • use of drugs prescribed or otherwise,
    • experiencing abuse,
    • exposure to or being a victim of domestic or other violence,
    • failing to maintain optimal physical health.
  • The immunity is framed as a bar to prosecution for those specified kinds of conduct.

Significant Changes to Existing Law

  • Codifies a new immunity rule within Minnesota Statutes Chapter 609, creating a protected category for pregnant people from criminal liability for certain behaviors connected to pregnancy.
  • Establishes that criminal charges and convictions cannot be pursued for conduct that would not be criminal if the person were not pregnant, with particular examples listed to guide interpretation.

Implications and Considerations

  • Shifts potential legal responses from criminal prosecution to health and safety approaches in cases involving pregnant people.
  • Could affect prosecutions related to drug use during pregnancy, experiences of abuse, or health-related concerns tied to pregnancy.
  • The bill text provided does not specify all possible exceptions, enforcement procedures, or interactions with other laws (e.g., child welfare reporting), which would likely be clarified in full legislative language or subsequent amendments.

Summary of Purpose and Effect

  • Purpose: Protect pregnant people from criminal charges for conduct that would not be criminal if they were not pregnant.
  • Effect: Creates a statutory immunity bar to prosecution for specified actions by pregnant persons, codified in Minnesota Statutes Chapter 609.

Relevant Terms - immunity - prosecution - pregnant person - Minnesota Statutes - section 609.077 - conduct that would not be criminalized if not pregnant - drug use (prescribed or otherwise) - abuse - domestic violence - violence - health maintenance - optimal physical health - criminal liability - immunity bar to prosecution

Bill text versions

Actions

DateChamberWhereTypeNameCommittee Name
March 23, 2026HouseActionIntroduction and first reading, referred toPublic Safety Finance and Policy

Citations

 
[
  {
    "analysis": {
      "added": [
        "Adds or codifies an immunity provision under section 609.077 that bars prosecution for specified pregnancy-related conduct."
      ],
      "removed": [],
      "summary": "This bill references Minnesota Statutes section 609.077, establishing an immunity bar to prosecution for certain actions by pregnant persons. It states that a pregnant person may not be charged with or convicted of conduct that would not be criminalized if the same person were not pregnant, including but not limited to drug use, abuse, exposure to or being a victim of domestic or other violence, or failing to maintain optimal physical health.",
      "modified": [
        "Modifies the scope of immunity in 609.077 to cover pregnancy-related conduct that would not be criminal if not pregnant (e.g., drug use, exposure to violence, etc.)."
      ]
    },
    "citation": "609.077",
    "subdivision": ""
  }
]

Progress through the legislative process

17%
In Committee
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